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Rendon’s pursuit of happiness

Inside the Golden State political arena
Oct 20, 2023 View in browser
 

By Lara Korte and Dustin Gardiner

Assemblymember Corey Jackson, second from left, gives then-Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, third from left, a hug at the state Capitol in Sacramento on June 1, 2023. Rendon will stepped down as speaker on June 30, giving way to Speaker Robert Rivas. | AP

DRIVING THE DAY: Gov. Gavin Newsom is on his way to China after a brief stop in Israel, where he was expected to meet with people affected by the country's war with Hamas.

His trip is giving him some geopolitical exposure and highlighting his role as a leader of a major green energy economy.

Back home, his Senate appointee Laphonza Butler is officially out of the running for next year’s race, bringing the focus back to the top three Democrats, Reps. Barbara Lee, Katie Porter and Adam Schiff. 

Butler’s bowing out also saves Newsom a headache. Here’s why.

THE BUZZ — Anthony Rendon wants to get lawmakers talking about happiness.

Things are much slower for the speaker emeritus since successor Robert Rivas took the gavel in July. After seven years in charge and one of the most contentious transfers of power the body had ever seen, his political future remains nebulous.

But, as he told Playbook during a conversation in downtown Los Angeles this month, Rendon wants to spend his last year chairing a select committee on a subject that, he says, gets far too little attention from the California legislature.

“It feels like we don’t take happiness seriously as a Policy issue,” he said, sitting in a coffee shop with his four-year-old daughter, Vienna, who sat on his knee while digging into a yogurt parfait.

“Nobody ever really talks about what makes people happy, and why they’re happy, and why they’re happy in some places and why they aren’t happy in others. I think it’s something that needs to be talked about,” he added.

Happiness has kept philosophers wondering for millennia, but in recent years, musings have become much more concrete, and Rendon wants to bring it to Sacramento.

The United Nations just celebrated 10 years of the annual World Happiness Report, which postulates that a country’s success should be judged not just by material achievements, but by its peoples’ happiness. The UN calculates its rankings of happiest countries by simply asking residents about their life satisfaction, which researchers tie to GDP per capita, social supports, life expectancy, freedom and the level of corruption.

When lawmakers return in January, they’ll have a full schedule: housing, climate change, big tech and fentanyl are all top of mind. But as Rendon sees it, happiness is just as existential: “There’s no point in giving people housing if they’re not happy,” he said.

There are lessons to be learned, Rendon says. Happiness is tied to certain levels of subsistence. Policy decisions around things like public transportation can have dire impacts on isolation and social connection.

He also floated the idea of an abbreviated work week to up the happiness index.

“The more you can have those moments of doing those things you like a lot, whether it’s playing an instrument or being with your family, that’s when people are happiest,” he said. “So, from a policy perspective, do you accomplish that with a 30-hour work week? Three-day weekends? What do you do there?”

The intersection of philosophy and politics is not new for Rendon, who started out studying aesthetic theory and has long been a champion of culture and the arts. But those characteristics have been thrown into sharp relief over the past 18 months as he reluctantly relinquished power and returned to life in the legislative trenches.

His conversation with Playbook touched on all the political topics du jour: the end of the Legislative session (“incredibly boring” as a normal member), the appointment of Sen. Butler (“Super thoughtful. Super smart.”) and the 2026 treasurer’s race (which he’s still running in).

He’d like to maybe teach. But he thinks he’d “be miserable teaching government or poli-sci,” he said. Politics might be his day job, but Rendon said he finds the constant speculation and plotting to be tedious.

“It’s like, the more people talk about stuff they can’t control, the more maladjusted they obviously are,” he said.

GOOD MORNING. Happy Friday.

PLAYBOOK TIP LINE — Who in the legislature is getting a new committee appointment next year? Give us a ring or drop us a line.

Now you can text us at ‪916-562-0685‬‪ — save it as “CA Playbook” in your contacts now. Or drop us a line at [email protected] and [email protected], or on Twitter —@DustinGardiner and @Lara_Korte 

WHERE’S GAVIN? Heading to China.

SPOTTED: Speaker Rivas hanging out with the one and only Willie Brown.

 

GROWING IN THE GOLDEN STATE: POLITICO California is growing, reinforcing our role as the indispensable insider source for reporting on politics, policy and power. From the corridors of power in Sacramento and Los Angeles to the players and innovation hubs in Silicon Valley, we're your go-to for navigating the political landscape across the state. Exclusive scoops, essential daily newsletters, unmatched policy reporting and insights — POLITICO California is your key to unlocking Golden State politics. LEARN MORE.

 
 
FRESH INK

Pro-San Francisco advertisements with the slogan “It All Starts Here” will pop up around the Bay Area in the coming weeks. The ads are part of a campaign to help repair the city’s image. | Courtesy of Advance SF

PAGING DON DRAPER — New York City suffered a public image crisis in the 1970s due to high crime and urban decay. A slogan helped the city reclaim its luster: “I Love NY.”

San Francisco business leaders are hoping to recreate a bit of that advertising magic as they aim to combat the Bay Area city’s PR headache. They rolled out a new ad campaign Thursday to push back against national and conservative media pundits dunking on the city.

Their much-awaited slogan: “It All Starts Here.”

The jingle is designed to emphasize San Francisco’s history as a place where new ideas are born and then quickly spread around the world. Think smartphones, Google, gay rights, Levi’s Jeans, the martini, Star Wars, Pixar, waterbeds, Janis Joplin, the Summer of Love and the television.

Those iconic San Francisco inventions, artists and brands will appear on billboards and transit stations around the Bay Area in the coming weeks.

The campaign is designed to counter the image of a dystopian city overrun by homelessness and fentanyl addiction — and instead capture its unique promise. It’s no coincidence that the rollout comes weeks ahead of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (or APEC) summit, when the city’s image will be deeply scrutinized.

“San Francisco has survived great fires, earthquakes and deep recessions — and it keeps coming back,” said SF Giants CEO Larry Baer. The ad campaign is sponsored by Advance SF, a group of business leaders that includes the Giants, The Gap Inc., big tech companies and OpenAI.

CONTEST ALERT: What do you make of the new pro-SF slogan? Think you can come up with a better jingle for the City by the Bay? Send us your ideas for an alternative ad campaign.

The reader who submits the most creative — or humorous — slogan will receive a special prize (i.e. a bag of POLITICO swag and a shout-out in Playbook). Tag us on Twitter or send submissions via email.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta sued Chino Valley Unified School District over its parental notification policy for transgender students. | AP

FROM THE COURTS — A California judge said Thursday that a controversial transgender student policy is likely unconstitutional.

San Bernardino Superior Court Judge Michael Sachs said during a hearing that he plans to block implementation of a Chino Valley Unified School District rule that requires parents to be notified if a student changes their gender identification at school. He said he wouldn’t strike a provision of the policy requiring staff to notify parents if their child asks for changes to official records.

“My ultimate concern are the kids, who are marginalized and sometimes they feel that they're not protected. Nobody has their back. My job as a judge is to have their back,” Sachs said during the first hearing in a lawsuit against the district.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta sued the district over the rules in August, but a handful of other districts have passed similar policies. Sachs’ ruling is far from the last word but it suggests other districts may face similar challenges.

WHAT WE'RE READING TODAY

HALLOWED GROUND: Tribes from the Upper Sacramento River area are divided over one tribe’s proposal to build a nine-story casino complex. Other nearby tribes say construction would disturb a site where the U.S. Cavalry massacred up to 1,500 native people in 1846.

TROUBLING DAY: The San Francisco Chronicle laid off at least eight people Thursday, including its entire podcast and SFNext teams. The paper did not report on its layoffs, but members of the newsroom union tweeted out details.

PLAYBOOKERS

TRANSITIONS — Adam Ramer has resigned as political director for Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), as The Intercept’s Ryan Grim reports. Ramer apparently quit because Khanna would not support a resolution calling for a ceasefire in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

BIRTHDAYS — Rep. Mike Levin (D-Calif.) … former Labor Secretary Hilda Solis … Webber Xu

 

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This post first appeared on Test Sandbox Updates, please read the originial post: here

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